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I can only tell you that when long soul-searching and a combination of circumstances delivered me of my last prejudices, there was an exalted sense of liberation. It was not the Negro who became free, but I.
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
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Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
Age: 57 †
Born: 1896
Born: August 8
Died: 1953
Died: December 14
Author
Novelist
Opinion Journalism
Prose
Screenwriter
Writer
Washington
District of Columbia
Marjorie Rawlings
Circumstances
Exalted
Lasts
Prejudices
Last
Negro
Free
Searching
Sense
Liberation
Tell
Combination
Soul
Prejudice
Long
Became
Delivered
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Sorrow was like the wind. It came in gusts.
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the truth is artistically fallacious.
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Lives are only one with living. How dare we, in our egos, claim catastrophe in the rise and fall of the individual entity? There is only Life, and we are beads strung on its strong and endless thread.
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Writing is agony for me. I work at it eight hours every day, hoping to get six pages, but I am satisfied with three.
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it is my conviction that the personality of the writer has nothing to do with the literate product of his mind. And publicity in this case embarrasses me because I am acutely conscious of how far short the book falls of the artistry I am struggling to achieve. It's like being caught half-dressed.
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the inferred is always more effective than the obvious.
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It's very important to be just to other people. It takes years and years of living to learn that injustice against oneself is always unimportant.
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He who tries to forget a woman, never loved her
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A dead tree, falling, made less havoc than a live one. It seemed as though a live tree went down fighting, like an animal.
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They were all too tightly bound together, men and women, creatures wild and tame, flowers, fruits and leaves, to ask that any one be spared. As long as the whole continued, the earth could go about its business.
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Ants in the house seem to be, not intruders, but the owners.
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I had done battle with a great fear and the victory was mine.
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But to make the intangible tangible, to pick the emotion out of the air and make it true for others, is both the blessing and the curse of the writer, for the thing between book covers is never as beautiful as the thing he imagined.
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A woman never forgets the men she could have had a man, the women he couldn't
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A man'll seem like a person to a woman, year in, year out. She'll put up and she'll put up. Then one day he'll do something maybe no worse than what he's been a-doing all his life. She'll look at him. And without no warning he'll look like a varmint.
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Readers themselves, I think, contribute to a book. They add their own imaginations, and it is as though the writer only gave them something to work on, and they did the rest.
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Garlic, like perfume, must be used with discretion and on the proper occasions.
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We cannot live without the Earth or apart from it, and something is shrivelled in a man's heart when he turns away from it and concerns himself only with the affairs of men
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The test of beauty is whether it can survive close knowledge.
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